History
of The Lion Dance
The legend says "Nian" was a
feirce monster that especially liked kidnapping children. He terrorized
villages year after year. Finally, one year, a lion defeated and
chased the monster away. Nian vowed to return next year. This time
the villagers did not have a lion to protect themselves. So, they
solved the problem by creating a costume likeness of a lion and
two villagers used it to scare Nian away. This is the reason the
lion dance is performed every Chinese New Year.
Legend also says that loud noises from the drum, other instruments,
and firecrackers helped scare Nian away. Red is worn during the
New Years celebration because it was also believed that Nian was
afraid of the color red. The word "Nian," thought the
yearly ceremony, has become the Chinese word for year.
Another origin of the lion dance is that an emperor of the Tang
Dynasty had a dream in which a strange creature saved his life.
When he woke, he described his dream. His advisors said the creature
he describe resembled the lion, a creature from the West. The emperor
commissioned the lion dance in honor of the creature that saved
his life.
The Tang dynasty saw lion dancing at its peak. One record states
that a dance performed for nobles contained 12 groups of 5 lions,
each with 12 'lion-men' following each lion. They danced to 140
people singing the 'tai-ping' melody (composed in the Tang Dynasty).
The Little Buddha originates from the Buddist/Shaolin monks that
was thought to have trained the first lion dancers. The Little Buddha
is sometimes refered to as the da to fut, or big headed monk.
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